Glastonbury Tor - myth and formation

Beyond the boundaries of established science an avalanche of exotic ideas compete for our attention. Experts tell us that these ideas should not be permitted to take up the time of working scientists, and for the most part they are surely correct. But what about the gems in the rubble pile? By what ground-rules might we bring extraordinary new possibilities to light? If you have a personal favorite theory, that is in someway related to the Electric Universe, this is where it can be posted.
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vector369
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Glastonbury Tor - myth and formation

Unread post by vector369 » Thu Jun 30, 2022 11:00 am

Hi, currently putting together a blog about the Glastonbury Tor as per the EU. Been in the area 16 months so have a feel for the place. The blog is mostly mythological content and so I would like to factor in geological scarring and was hoping to get some educated opinions/facts. Didn't know where else to put this. Blog is in my head at present.

Generally speaking, I put all hill/mountain formation down to the actual thunderbolt but having watched the informed Andrew Hall, we're clearly dealing with shock blast patterning as well, at least. A video on theTor would get a lot of attention and could bring new folk in.. (Table Top Mountain, Mt Shasta etc.)

I dont seem to be able to put images up- how to?

This is a good picture of the Tor-

http://avalonmarshes.org/wp-content/upl ... 00x408.jpg

Geology-
1)The top of the Tor is formed from Bridport Sands and is underlain by clays and limestones.
or
2)The Tor consists of layers of clay and blue lias strata (Jurassic sandstone) with a cap of hard midford sandstone.

edit: The marshland around the Tor is very flat and at see level. It's kind of like the land was sucked in and up to make the material for the Tor. The low ground level around the Tor is why it used to be submersed and was/is called the Isle of Avalon. Nowadays, of course, there is water/river managementt and so it is now drained and used for grazing.

Terraces-
The seven deep, roughly symmetrical terraces are one of the Tor's enduring mysteries. A number of possible explanations for them have been put forward:
1) Agricultural terracing
2) Cattle grazing
3) Defensive ramparts
4) 3d maze
5) Staggered erosion due to different types of rock (added by me as read elsewhere)
In more depth https://www.liquisearch.com/glastonbury_tor/terraces

Questions for me would be;
Was the Tor (rock outcrop) formed as a direct interplanetary lightning bolt between Earth and Venus/Medusa?
Do the terraces exhibit any shock wave patterning? Any EU ideas on potential formation of the terraces?
Did Mars lightning strike Earth as well?
On the basis of instant fossilisation and rock formation via lightning, which is present at the Tor as far as ammonites go, what factors decide the geology of a hill/mountain? What has to be lightning struck to produce limestone, for example?

Possibly more questions but I'll put this out there for now.

Any involvement appreciated, ta

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vector369
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Re: Glastonbury Tor - myth and formation

Unread post by vector369 » Sun Jul 03, 2022 10:11 am

I dont seem to be able to post images though I've checked everything as far as I can tell..

If anybody wants to have a look at this image and suggest how it was, or might have been, formed, great.

http://avalonmarshes.org/wp-content/upl ... 00x408.jpg

If nothing else, it's a very interesting geological structure if it isnt man made as some believe it is.

There's something very interesting regarding the EU in Glastonbury. I've pointed it out to a few people and all got it straight away. I may post the blog here for thoughts..

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philalethes
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Re: Glastonbury Tor - myth and formation

Unread post by philalethes » Sun Jul 03, 2022 5:10 pm

The 7 Steps reminds me of Dwardu Cardona's discussion about Saturn back in the God Star days, being periodically overcharged by interactions with Sol, and making plasma ejecta to discharge, and these formed rings around Saturn Star. Of course mankind recorded these changes to the Eye in the Sky. The rings were described in various metaphors as moats, or steps, and it seems most likely to me this is the metaphor for the ziggurat, seeing God Star as sitting at the top of His pyramid or ziggurat. And of course, the Menorah of 7 candlesticks.

Even today Saturn has 7 recognized rings... which would have been more pronounced and vivid 6000 years ago https://drive.google.com/file/d/19DN4WA ... sp=sharing

p.s. I too tried in vain to get an image I put on Imgur as well as Google drive to show in my post.

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philalethes
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Re: Glastonbury Tor - myth and formation

Unread post by philalethes » Sun Jul 03, 2022 5:41 pm

FAQ says:
Can I post images?
Yes, images can be shown in your posts. If the administrator has allowed attachments, you may be able to upload the image to the board. Otherwise, you must link to an image stored on a publicly accessible web server, e.g. http://www.example.com/my-picture.gif. You cannot link to pictures stored on your own PC (unless it is a publicly accessible server) nor images stored behind authentication mechanisms, e.g. hotmail or yahoo mailboxes, password protected sites, etc. To display the image use the BBCode [img] tag.

this one displayed an image: https://thunderbolts.info/wp/forum3/phpBB3 ... &t=48#p235 and it still does, but when i tried using the code from that post in this test, I get error.

I tried many other forms using [img][img] and get;

It was not possible to determine the dimensions of the image. Please verify that the URL you entered is correct.

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vector369
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Re: Glastonbury Tor - myth and formation

Unread post by vector369 » Tue Jul 05, 2022 3:33 pm

philalethes, thanks for your input.

I am torn between man made and nature made. I would vie on the side of a direct lightning strike from Venus/Medusa and subsequent sonic shock blast waves similar to cymatics, maybe. The Tor is kind of perched on a hill which is also at a much higher level than the sea level marshland surrounding it. Limestone and fossils are present which, I guess, means that there was a lightning strike and instant fossilisation.

At the base of the Tor are 2 springs within 20 yards of each other which is, upposedly, quite rare in itself. One is Chalice Well and is called The Red Spring. It has a very high iron content, enough to turn the water collector's bottles orange. I personally can't drink. The other spring is called simply The White Spring and has an inordinately high calcium content- 100mg+/100ml. Too high to drink daily imo. Many locals see thew red spring as masculine and the white spring as feminine. I'd agree because the red spring is coloured by matter that fell to Earth from Mars, the masculine god of war. I'd also agree that the white spring is feminine and possibly that the high calcium content from limestone was caused by a Venus/Medusa lightning strike causing rock to be formed.

I've come to call the red spring Blood of Mars and the white spring, Milk of Venus. I could go further and claim that without the rock formations of Venus and the iron from Mars, humans could not have blood or bones. But, maybe I'm going a bit far there?

A picture of the Alchemical Marriage of Mars and Venus, integrating masculine and feminine http://insightastrology.net/wp-content/ ... rriage.jpg

Could the Worlds in Collision/Clash of the Titans be seen as planetary alchemy? It strikes me in some ways as like a chemist pouring from one beaker (planet) into another to make something else and facilitate life.

I'm guessing I cant post pics due to post count maybe?

Thanks and anyone feel free to agree/disagree

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vector369
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Re: Glastonbury Tor - myth and formation

Unread post by vector369 » Tue Jul 05, 2022 5:39 pm

philalethes is a name I dont believe I've ever heard yet it appeared on a Theosophy video released today that I've just started playing. Do like a synch. A nod from the uni-verse..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9Gi56vUzuM
atb

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vector369
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Re: Glastonbury Tor - myth and formation

Unread post by vector369 » Tue Jul 12, 2022 3:39 pm

Thought this was interesting. Omphalos Stone: "Found at the rear of the Abbott's Kitchen in Glastonbury Abbey. It is a Tor Burr with a slot cut into the top for a cross." Appqarently, it came from the south slopes of the Tor where more can be found. I'll have a looksie. https://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=11682

Omphalos means navel. Obviously, very clearly the same as the EUs "spherules". Has an equatorial region and a hole/navel.

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vector369
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Re: Glastonbury Tor - myth and formation

Unread post by vector369 » Tue Jul 12, 2022 8:23 pm

Went up the Red and White Spring and chatted to a local. He had heard of another large "egg stone", as he called it, that was on the Tor itself and similar to the one removed from there to be placed at the Abbey. He had an idea where but it transpired to be incorrect. Fortunately, the red haired guy who knows the Tor like the back of his hand, was 5 yards in front of me. He immediately directed me to the spot where the stone on the Tor is. About half way up behind two Hawthorns. I'd have not found it without his arrival. I'd guess that there are more spherules/Tor Burrs.

Difficult climb but photo'ed the stone. Definitely has an equatorial band around the middle but no dip/navel. So I'm guessing these are caused by secondary, smaller branches of lightning? Pictures on an image hoster

https://ibb.co/M9TpRTs
https://ibb.co/qdycFzM
https://ibb.co/2vPDqLs

There was exposed sandstone rock in the area around the Tor Burr/spherule.

Also read that at one point, both springs joined and flowed together. Cool

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vector369
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Re: Glastonbury Tor - myth and formation

Unread post by vector369 » Sun Jul 31, 2022 7:09 pm

Did a blog on Glastonbury Tor Burrs or Egg Stones as some locals like to call them. It felt more scientifically secure and not so out there and so a good way to warm folk to the electric idea. Did a formation blog and published it as well, as unfinished, so haven't shared it yet. Reception was quite favourable to Glastonbury Tor and Thunderbird Eggs blog as one fb page was very happy to share it. Criticism welcome: https://arcturyn.wixsite.com/website/po ... rbird-eggs

I follow alot of projects, groups, societies etc. Something I notice a few doing is facilitating qualifications, study programs and so text books etc. I guess it's only a matter of time before there's an EU Geology text book and similar. Never thought I'd be interested in Geology/Geography again

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